The Republic of Cthulhu: Lovecraft, the Weird Tale, and Conspiracy TheoryIf parapolitics, a branch of radical criminology that studies the interactions between public entities and clandestine agencies, is to develop as an academic discipline, then it must develop a coherent theory of aesthetics in order to successfully perform its primary function: to render perceptible extra-judicial phenomena that have hitherto resisted formal classification. Wilson offers the work of H.P. Lovecraft (1890-1937) as an example of the relevance of subversive literature-in this case, cosmic horror and the weird tale-to the parapolitical criminologist. Cosmic horror is a form of writing that relies heavily upon the epistemological assumption of a radical and irreconcilable disjunction between appearance and reality, perception and truth. In many ways, the well-constructed weird tale strongly resembles the hard-boiled detective story or the noir thriller in that the resolution of the narrative hinges upon a dramatically shattering confrontation with an unspeakable reality. Apart from its obvious utilization of conspiracy theory, the primary attraction of the Lovecraftian text lies with its remarkably sophisticated utilization of two central tropes of classical aesthetic theory-the sublime and the grotesque. Not only does Lovecraft's oeuvre represent a remarkable use of both of these motifs, but the raw literary power of the Lovecraftian weird tale serves as an outstanding exemplar for the parapolitical scholar to emulate in formulating an alternative mode of discourse, or poetics. |
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aesthetic alien anthropocentric artistic beautiful body brain-blasting Call of Cthulhu Cartesian central chaos Charles Dexter Ward clandestine cognitive concept conspiracy narrative conspiracy theory conspiratorial constitutes cosmic horror crime novel Critique of Judgment Cthulhu Mythos cult Cyclopean daemonic dark Debord Deep detective discursive dreams epistemological fantastic fear fiction film genre Grotesque in Art H.P. Lovecraft Harman Hegel hidden Holy horror fiction Houellebecq human hybrid Ibid Idea identity Jameson Kant Kantian Kayser Levy liberal literary Lovecraftian Lyotard magnitude metaphysical mind modern modernist monster monstrous Mountains of Madness nameless narrator nature Necronomicon notion object occult ontological Otto paradox parapolitical perception phenomenological Philosophy political precisely Press protagonist radical reality Red Hook revealed reverse colonization S.T. Joshi Scott scream sense Shadow over Innsmouth signifier social sovereignty space spectacle sublime supernatural terror Thacker things tion trauma truth ture unity University weird tale Wholly York


